Ursula Joyce Torday was born on 19 February 1912 (in some sources wrongly 1888) in London, England, United Kingdom; her mother, Gaia Rose Macdonald, was Scottish, and her father, Emil Torday (1875–1931) was a Hungarian anthropologist - they had married on 17 March 1910.[2][3][4]
In the 1930s, she published her first three novels under her real name: Ursula Torday.
During World War II, she worked as a probation officer for the Citizen's Advice Bureau. During the next seven years she also ran a refugee scheme for Jewish children, an inspiration for several of her future novels such as The Briar Patch (a.k.a. Young Lucifer); The Children (a.k.a. Wednesday's Children) is her memoir about her work with children of the Holocaust. She worked as a typist at the National Central Library (England and Wales) in London,[5] inspiration for her future novel Dewey Death as Charity Blackstock.[4] She also taught English to adult students.
Writer
She returned to publishing in the early 1950s using the pen names of Paula Allardyce or Charity Blackstock (in some cases reedited as Lee Blackstock in the USA) to sign her gothic romance and mystery novels. Later, she also used the pen name Charlotte Keppel. She published her last novel in 1982.
Miss Fenny (1957) a.k.a. The Woman in the Woods (US title)
The Foggy, Foggy Dew (1958)
The Shadow of Murder (1958) a.k.a. All Men Are Murderers as Lee Blackstock (US title)
The Bitter Conquest (1959)
The Briar Patch (1960) a.k.a. Young Lucifer as Ursula Torday (US title)
The Exorcism (1961) a.k.a. A House Possessed (US title)
The Gallant (1962)
Mr. Christopoulos (1963)
The Factor's Wife (1964) a.k.a. The English Wife (US title)
When the Sun Goes Down (1965) a.k.a. Monkey on a Chain (US title)
The Knock at Midnight (1966)
The Children (1966) a.k.a. Wednesday's Children (US title)--memoir
The book is about author's experience as the secretary of the charitable endeavor by Bloomsbury House to settle the French-Jewish children-Holocaust survivors to spend two summer months in English-Jewish households. The book also describes the Holocaust experience of some of these children as narrated to the author.[10]
Party in Dolly Creek (1967) a.k.a. The Widow (US title)
The Melon in the Cornfield (1969) a.k.a. The Lemmings (US title)
The Daughter (1970)
The Encounter (1971)
The Jungle (1972)
The Lonely Strangers (1972)
People in Glass Houses (1975)
Ghost Town (1976)
I Met Murder on the Way (1977) a.k.a. The Shirt Front (US title)